orbit is a small complex anatomic space that contains important structures, ocular globe, extrinsic muscles, cranial nerves, blood vessels, fat, lacrimal gland. In presence of orbital tumors it is mandatory to use a surgical approach that allows to achieve an adequate surgical field while preserving neurological function. neuronavigation is the set of computer-assisted technologies used to guide or "navigate” the edges of the tumor to allow the surgeon during resection or biopsy. this technology started with use of CT data to get some landmarks of human anatomy defined “targets” that could be readily used in surgery. finally, the evolution of modern neuroimaging technologies such intraoperative CT and MRI boosted the surgery accuracy. In order to identify advantages and practical use of these technologies we performed a nonsystematic review of the current literature using the keywords “orbital tumor or orbital neoplasia or orbital mass or orbital lesion” and “neuronavigation or navigation” published in last 10 years. we evaluated 29 papers and we can conclude that navigation in orbital surgery helps to reduce surgical damage while at the same time, allowing a more radical tumor resection. CT and MRI scans are complementary in diagnosing and in intraoperative navigation allow the surgeon to avoid and preserve vital structures, particularly in a complex surgical procedure without real anatomical landmarks for intraoperative orientation. Future is going towards rapid changes and the integration with intraoperative procedures is carrying on to new technologies further our contemporary bounds.

Marenco, M., Terenzi, V., Pucci, R., Lambiase, A., Valentini, V. (2019). Neuronavigation and intraoperative imaging system in orbital tumor surgery: a review of recent literature. OPHTHALMOLOGY CLINICS & RESEARCH, 2(1), 42-47.

Neuronavigation and intraoperative imaging system in orbital tumor surgery: a review of recent literature

Terenzi V;Valentini V
2019-01-01

Abstract

orbit is a small complex anatomic space that contains important structures, ocular globe, extrinsic muscles, cranial nerves, blood vessels, fat, lacrimal gland. In presence of orbital tumors it is mandatory to use a surgical approach that allows to achieve an adequate surgical field while preserving neurological function. neuronavigation is the set of computer-assisted technologies used to guide or "navigate” the edges of the tumor to allow the surgeon during resection or biopsy. this technology started with use of CT data to get some landmarks of human anatomy defined “targets” that could be readily used in surgery. finally, the evolution of modern neuroimaging technologies such intraoperative CT and MRI boosted the surgery accuracy. In order to identify advantages and practical use of these technologies we performed a nonsystematic review of the current literature using the keywords “orbital tumor or orbital neoplasia or orbital mass or orbital lesion” and “neuronavigation or navigation” published in last 10 years. we evaluated 29 papers and we can conclude that navigation in orbital surgery helps to reduce surgical damage while at the same time, allowing a more radical tumor resection. CT and MRI scans are complementary in diagnosing and in intraoperative navigation allow the surgeon to avoid and preserve vital structures, particularly in a complex surgical procedure without real anatomical landmarks for intraoperative orientation. Future is going towards rapid changes and the integration with intraoperative procedures is carrying on to new technologies further our contemporary bounds.
2019
Pubblicato
Rilevanza internazionale
Articolo
Sì, ma tipo non specificato
Settore MEDS-15/B - Chirurgia maxillo-facciale
English
Orbital tumor
Orbital surgery
neuronavagation
Intraoperative computer tomography
Intraoperative magnetic resonance
Marenco, M., Terenzi, V., Pucci, R., Lambiase, A., Valentini, V. (2019). Neuronavigation and intraoperative imaging system in orbital tumor surgery: a review of recent literature. OPHTHALMOLOGY CLINICS & RESEARCH, 2(1), 42-47.
Marenco, M; Terenzi, V; Pucci, R; Lambiase, A; Valentini, V
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2108/394319
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